Tupac Hologram To Tour With Dr. Dre And Snoop Dogg?

The hologram likeness of late rap superstar Tupac Shakur that wowed fans attending Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg's Coachella Music Festival set Sunday night just may be joining the west coast veterans on tour, according to the Wall Street Journal.

"Representatives for Dr. Dre and Snoop Dogg plan to discuss logistics for a tour involving the two performers and the virtual Tupac, according to a person familiar with the discussions," the Wall Street Journal reported.

If this materializes, it could have the blessing of Tupac's mother, Afeni Shakur, who, according to TMZ, was "positively thrilled" with the hologram performance modeled after he son.

Dr. Dre reportedly made a donation to the Tupac Amaru Shakur Foundation as a way to say thanks to Tupac's mother for allowing him to use her son's image.

While the actual specifics of how the hologram works are under wraps until after the festival closes, in an interview with Dr. Dre last week on Los Angeles radio station Power 106 revealed that Coachella organizers had given the rapper a "blank check" to do whatever he wanted for his weekend sets. Before the festival, there were initial rumors of a hologram homage to rapper, and frequent Dre and Snoop collaborator, Nate Dogg, who passed away last May due to complications from multiple strokes. With a second set coming up the second weekend of Coachella, chances are a hologram Nate Dogg may be the surprise guest joining the set, perhaps even along with hologram Tupac!

Digital Domain, the company whose work includes Brad Pitt's CG reverse aging in "The Curious Case of Benjamin Button," the youthful Jeff Bridges in "TRON: Legacy," and the holographic Gorillaz performance for the 2005 Grammys, was hired on to create the Tupac hologram. AV Concepts president Nick Smith, whose company headed the actual projection of the image, said of the technology, "You can take their likenesses and voice and ... take people that haven't done concerts before or perform music they haven't sung and digitally recreate it."

With this technology in existence, there is a massive catalog of deceased or audience-fearing artists that have the possibility of performing live. Thus with the under-million price tag, Smith described the process as being "affordable" since it does away with the cost of transporting artists and the ability to "put [artists] in every venue in the country."

And like with any other huge event in recent times, immediately after the performance a Twitter page for the Tupac hologram has popped up, gaining over 10,000 followers in less than a day.

What do you think of the Tupac Shakur hologram at Coachella? Leave your comments below!